
16-bit Windows games, when they were commercial, usually came in packs. This may have been because most of these games were too small to sell seperately with success, or because Windows encouraged the use of shared libraries. There was the Symantec Game Pach by Charles Timmerman, best known is probably the Windows Entertainment Package that came in several installments and had Windows versions of classics like Tetris, Life or Chip's Challenge.
And then there is one that is, undeservedly, very little known: the Getaway Entertainment 6 Pack by Epyx. Probably the best game from this set is Stuffin' the Briefcase, a unique puzzle game (the only similarity I know is organizing your inventory in Diablo) where you have to pack items into an attaché case that are both realistic and ironic at the same time.
The Getaway Entertainment 6 Pack is more lavish than its contemporaries, it pays to run it on a better machine. You miss something if you do not have sound, and it looks a bit better on a 256-color desktop.